Digital Humanities Abstracts

“The Proposed Companion to Humanities Computing ”
Ray Siemens Malaspina University-College siemensr@mala.bc.ca John Unsworth IATH, University of Virginia jmu2m@virginia.edu Susan Schreibman MITH, University of Maryland susan_schreibman@umail.umd.edu

What lies at the intersection of computational methods and humanities scholarship -- humanities computing -- is of growing importance, an importance that is seen both in the rise of contributions made by such approaches to field specific research and research dissemination, and in its representation in the undergraduate and graduate curriculum of a growing number of institutions. Even so, there is no single resource available to introduce this field's concerns and to serve its curricular needs. Our Companion to Humanities Computing is, thus, proposed as much out of pragmatic necessity, to address the unmet needs of a growing area of inquiry, as it is out of curricular service, to serve those needs by offering a selection of specially commissioned articles representative of the central concerns shared by all those interested in humanities computing. Aimed specifically at serving students and instructors in upper level undergraduate courses, those at the graduate level, and interested leaders both within and outside academe, the Companion will provide a representation of the field and its curricular concerns that documents the field's evolution, its current state, and its potential future.